Pope Francis’s apt choice of symbols has nods to tradition as well as his Argentinian roots.
POPE
Francis mixed his Argentine past with his Roman present to create his
new papal coat of arms, while harking back to a pope associated with the
Second Vatican Council for the simple ring that he received during
yesterday’s installation Mass.
The Vatican released details of
the symbols of Francis’s pontificate, which in its inaugural days has
been marked by his preference for simplicity and aversion to Holy See
splendour.
The new pope chose to keep the same coat of arms he
had as archbishop of Buenos Aires, and picked the simplest ring out of
several models offered to him. It is fashioned in gold-plated silver
and was once a gift to Pope Paul VI, who presided over the second half
of Vatican II, the meetings that modernised the Catholic Church.
The coat of arms has a necessary addition — the papal symbols
surrounding it: A gilded miter, and crossed gold and silver keys.
The shield itself, in very simple almost modern heraldry, depicts a
star, a grape-like plant, and a monogram of Christ at the centre of a
fiery sun. The symbols represent the three members of the Holy Family:
Jesus, Mary and Joseph. In religious writing, Mary is often referred to
as a “star”, while St Joseph is often depicted holding a nard, a Middle
Eastern plant. The monogram is the symbol of Francis’s Jesuit order.
His motto suggests even more about the root of Francis’s message:
“Miserando atque eligendo”, Latin for “Having had mercy, he called him.”
It comes from an episode in the Gospel where Christ picks a seemingly unworthy person to follow him.
Francis has stressed the importance of mercy, saying that often people
are unforgiving with one another, but that God is all-merciful. “And
very patient,” he ad-libbed from the window of his studio during his
first Angelus prayer on Sunday.
In a written explanation of
the coat of arms, motto and ring, the Vatican said the inspiration for
the motto stems from the calling Jorge Bergoglio heard at the age of 17,
when “he experienced the presence of the love of God in a very special
way”, and decided to join the Jesuit order.
Francis’s official ring will look like gold, but in fact is only gold
plated. Known as the Fisherman’s Ring from the apostle Peter, who was a
fisherman and the first pope, Francis’s version depicts St Peter holding
the keys of the Holy See. Each pope picks his own ring, which will be
destroyed at the end of his papacy.
According to Vatican
spokesman the Rev Federico Lombardi, the ring was one of several offered
to Francis. Fashioned in the 1960s by Italian goldsmith Enrico
Manfrini, it was offered to Paul VI through his private secretary.
Lombardi said it is not known if the pope ever used it.